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Posted

I’ve wanted to try making a trunk or hard sided suitcase for some time. My wife suggested a trunk for her cook books. Sure, sounds fun.

I used 1/2 inch maple plywood for structure. Leather is chocolate pull-up from Waterhouse Leather and W&C English bridle for black trim. Hardware from Ohio Travel Bag and Brettuns Village. A bunch of brass escutcheon pins and black wool fabric for lining.  

Since I’m not a woodworker, hand sawing and assembling a “square” trunk took some time and practice to get it where I wanted it.  Primarily watched You Tube videos for ideas on how to construct, cover and finish a trunk.  Couldn’t find many written resources so I created a document with screen shots of the build process from a variety of videos.  Not too scientific but gave me some ideas on how to proceed.  I’m happy to share it if anyone has an interest.

I am happy with how it turned out.  There are a few things I’d do different on the next one but mostly little stuff to make build easier.  

Most importantly, my wife loves it.  

BookTrunk.jpg

TrunkBuild.jpg

Posted (edited)

Here are some build images to give you an idea how I built it.

1.  The plans will give you an idea of the size and pieces. This is as close to a “plan” as I get.  On the right side you will see outlines of hardware. I was trying to understand the sizes. 

2. Bought a Japanese saw to improve my cuts  

3. Bottom template to understand size.  Laid it in kitchen floor to make sure size made sense.

4. Main body glued.

 

 

 

Book-1.jpg

Book-2.jpg

Book-3.jpg

Book-4.jpg

Edited by terryHHI
Posted

5. Body pieces glued.

6. Lid construction

7. Handle 

Book-5.jpg

Bbok-6.jpg

Book-7.jpg

Posted

5. Body pieces glued.

6. Lid construction

7. Handle 

Posted

Wow. That's amazing! Thanks for sharing.

  • Members
Posted

Looks great! And a lot of work. Good job.

  • Members
Posted

I really like how that turned out!  Did you cement the leather to the wood?

YinTx

  • Members
Posted

Really cool. See, I never think of things like this but I'm awfully glad other people are and do or else trunk making would die. That looks great!

Posted

What a great project Terry!  Couple of questions:

1. Did you wrap the leather around the front and into the case, or did you glue it to the front and trim it?  Looks like you metered the corners of the leather.

2. Hard to tell where the wool lining ends - does it extend all the way to the front of the case opening and butt up against the leather?  Or does the leather wrap around inside the opening and overlap the wool lining?

It’s apparent that a lot of time and effort went into the design and build - really nice job!

Gary

Posted
7 hours ago, YinTx said:

Did you cement the leather to the wood?

Hi YinTx, thank you and yes, leather was glued.  I glued to outside first and let it dry.  Then I glued flap, stuck the leather to top edge of box, trimmed the corners and then stuck the leather to inside.  

Posted (edited)
53 minutes ago, garypl said:

1. Did you wrap the leather around the front and into the case, or did you glue it to the front and trim it?  Looks like you metered the corners of the leather.

Hi Gary,

See my response to YinTx about process. I think was writing that when you were writing this question. I found that trying to glue entire piece, wrap and trim all in one process created a mess. I went back and watched some videos and realized trunk makers did it in two steps. 1. Glue outside. 2. Miter corners and glue top edge and inside. Having outside firmly in place made everything much more manageable.

53 minutes ago, garypl said:

2. Hard to tell where the wool lining ends - does it extend all the way to the front of the case opening and butt up against the leather?  Or does the leather wrap around inside the opening and overlap the wool lining?

The lining is wool glued and wrapped around bag stiffener. I made a bottom piece and glued it in first. Then I made long sides and attached them. Last,  the end pieces were added.  Lining overlaps the leather on inside and comes up to about 1 cm from edge.  

 

And thanks for compliment.  It was a fun project. 

Book-8.jpg

Edited by terryHHI
Added picture
  • Members
Posted

WOW that is really amazing!  You did such an outstanding job Terry!  Happy Wife=Happy Life :)

Posted
4 hours ago, terryHHI said:

Hi Gary,

See my response to YinTx about process. I think was writing that when you were writing this question. I found that trying to glue entire piece, wrap and trim all in one process created a mess. I went back and watched some videos and realized trunk makers did it in two steps. 1. Glue outside. 2. Miter corners and glue top edge and inside. Having outside firmly in place made everything much more manageable.

The lining is wool glued and wrapped around bag stiffener. I made a bottom piece and glued it in first. Then I made long sides and attached them. Last,  the end pieces were added.  Lining overlaps the leather on inside and comes up to about 1 cm from edge.  

 

And thanks for compliment.  It was a fun project. 

Book-8.jpg

Thanks Terry - picture tells it all!  Nice job!

Gary

Posted
On 5/31/2018 at 7:54 AM, terryHHI said:

Since I’m not a woodworker, hand sawing and assembling a “square” trunk took some time and practice to get it where I wanted it.  Primarily watched You Tube videos for ideas on how to construct, cover and finish a trunk.  Couldn’t find many written resources so I created a document with screen shots of the build process from a variety of videos.  Not too scientific but gave me some ideas on how to proceed.  I’m happy to share it if anyone has an interest.

Terry's 141 MB PPT file converted to pdf, 8.8 MB.  As noted above, it contains screen shoots from various web sources.

Trunk Build Images.pdf

Tom

  • 2 weeks later...
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Posted

That is a very cool idea.  It looks great.

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Posted

I am really late to this post but....  WOW!   Incredible work!  

Thank you for sharing!

Cheers

 

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Posted

Wow!  

Very cool project!

Posted

Stellar job!

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Posted

Very nice!

Posted

Thanks everyone.  It turned out better then I expected. I’m thinking about trying a hard sided suitcase next. 

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Posted

Very cool

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